BlueSource Publications

It took me a long time to find out my mistakes. I’m telling my friends including my wife and everybody, I’m not fattening no more frogs for snakes. — Sonny Boy Williamson

Playlist for Blues Unlimited Show #30 – Blues Instrumentals, Pt. 1 October 22, 2009

Filed under: Blues Radio — stevefranz @ 5:42 pm

SONG TITLE • ARTIST • ALBUM

#1) Fast Boogie • Little Walter • Chess Blues (Box Set)

#2) Rib Joint • Sam Price & His Texas Bluesicians • In The ’50s; Hit, Git & Split

#3) Down Town • Alexis Korner’s Blues Incorporated • R & B From The Marquee

#4) Shuffleboard • Memphis Slim • The Come Back

#5) Elmo’s Shuffle • Elmore James & His Broomdusters • The Classic Early Recordings 1951-1956

#6) Track Down • Calvin Frazier • Stompin’ 27 – 22 Rockin’ Blues Classics!

#7) Frog Hop • Earl Hooker • Earl Hooker – Simply The Best

#8) Cuban Getaway (aka Bayou Rock) • Ike Turner & The Kings Of Rhythm • Ike’s Intrumentals

#9) Old Time Shuffle • Lloyd Glenn • Honky Tonk Train

#10) Boogie In The Dark • Jimmy Reed • Jimmy Reed – The Complete Vee-Jay Recordings

#11) Chicken (aka Chuck-A-Luck) • Baby Boy Warren • Detroit Blues (JSP)

#12) St. Louis Sunset Twist • Benny Sharp And His Orch. • Stompin’ 3

#13) Five Spot • Otis Spann • Chess Blues Piano Greats

#14) Juke Box Boogie • Doctor Ross • The Complete Sun Singles, Vol. 1

#15) Dog Man • Big Amos Patton • River Town Blues

#16) Shake Dancer • Little Walter • Blues With A Feeling

#17) The Squeeze • Wild Jimmy Spruill (With Horace Cooper & Band) • Scratch ‘n Twist – Rare And Unreissued 1956-1962

#18) L.C.’s Shuffle • L.C. Good Rockin’ Robinson • Mojo In My Hand

#19) I Got It • Johnny Young • Johnny Young And His Friends

Be sure to check out our podcast page for more great Blues!

 

Post War Down Home Favorites, Part 1 August 1, 2009

Filed under: Blues Radio — stevefranz @ 1:46 am
 

AFBF Part 3 & Great Texas Blues Guitarists! July 22, 2009

Filed under: Blues Radio — stevefranz @ 2:39 am

Tonight on “Blues Unlimited,” it’s part 3 of our special tribute to the American Folk Blues Festival tours, this time, the tours from 1980 to 1985. Eddie Taylor, Willie Mabon, Sunnyland Slim, Hubert Sumlin, Cephas & Wiggins, James “Son” Thomas, Lonnie Pitchford, Louisiana Red, and many more! Don’t miss it! That’s Wednesday, July 22, 2009, from 2-4am MST, only on www.kxci.org

And next week, don’t miss a show that we’re very proud to present, which will profile the greatest of the greats of Texas Blues Guitar. We stay pretty much strictly uptown for this tribute– T-Bone Walker, Gatemouth Brown, Lowell Fulson, Albert Collins, and, yes, Freddy King, too! (Some of the great Texas Country Blues artists– like Lightnin’ Hopkins, Frankie Lee Sims, Smokey Hogg, Soldier Boy Houston (and many more)– will be featured in an upcoming show).

It all happens on “Blues Unlimited,” every Wednesday, from 2-4am, only on KXCI Community Radio, 91.3FM, right here in Tucson.

Interested in previous shows? Write to us at bluesunlimited@gmail.com

 

Tribute to the ‘American Folk Blues Festival’ Tours – Pt. 1 of 3 July 8, 2009

Filed under: Blues Radio — stevefranz @ 5:07 am

Tonight on ‘Blues Unlimited,’ part one of a special three-part series devoted to the music and performers who were part of the legendary American Folk Blues Festival tours. Tonight, in particular, is devoted to the early years, 1962-1966. Organized by two German men, Horst Lippmann and Fritz Rau, the Festivals (or just AFBF for short) brought together an amazing array of blues talent that was soaked up by an eager, young, European audience just when they were ready to hear it. In England, particularly, future members of the Rolling Stones (among others) rented a truck to drive to the 1962 show to catch a glimpse of some of their blues-hero legends in person. In the spring of 1963, Blues Unlimited magazine was born, and the blues revival of the 1960s was well underway.

Perhaps you’ve seen the DVDs of the AFBF performances, or heard of them. Relive some of the heady magic of yesteryear, tonight, July 8, 2009, from 2-4am, MST, only on www.kxci.org

Oh, and future programs will be devoted to the AFBF 1967-1972 years, and a third installment on the early 1980s tours. Enjoy!

 

Live in the 1960s June 16, 2009

Filed under: Blues Radio — stevefranz @ 6:46 am

On the next edition of Blues Unlimited, a look back to some of the greatest moments of live blues performance. From B.B. King’s classic ‘Live at the Regal,’ to Muddy Waters’ ground-breaking performance at the 1960 Newport Jazz Festival, to Robert Nighthawk’s low-down (and jaw-dropping!) gutbucket blues recorded live at Chicago’s legendary Maxwell Street Market in 1964, to Magic Sam’s incredible performance at Ann Arbor in 1969, we’ll have two hours of not just great blues, but some of the greatest blues ever recorded, period. Don’t miss this extra special edition of Blues Unlimited, only on Tucson’s Community Radio Station, KXCI, 91.3 FM, this Wednesday from 2-4am. Or listen online at www.kxci.org.

 

Originators of the Memphis Blues June 9, 2009

Filed under: Blues Radio — stevefranz @ 5:31 pm

On this week’s installment of ‘Blues Unlimited,’ a very special program dedicated to the originators of the Memphis Blues. From Furry Lewis to Gus Cannon to Frank Stokes, Will Batts, Noah Lewis, and more. And of course, the best of the best from those great Memphis Jug Bands. Only on www.kxci.org (91.3 FM if you live in Southern Arizona), from 2-4am MST, this Wednesday, June 10, 2009.

 

This Week on “Blues Unlimited” (27 May 09) May 26, 2009

Filed under: Blues Radio — stevefranz @ 7:09 am

This week on “Blues Unlimited,” don’t miss a special two-hour tribute to some of the greatest Post-War Chicago Blues Guitarists. From Arthur “Big Boy” Crudup, Muddy Waters, & Jimmy Rogers to Elmore James, J.B. Lenoir, & Jimmy Reed, we’ll take a chronological look, starting with Crudup’s seminal waxing of “That’s All Right Mama” and Muddy’s very first 78 (in 1946) to Elmore James’ 1952 arrival in Chicago with his patented super-amplified electric-Delta-Chicago blues. Only on www.kxci.org, this Wednesday, 5/27/09, from 2-4am MST (Or catch us over the air on 91.3 FM if you happen to live in Southern Arizona).

 

On the next “Blues Unlimited” (5/13/2009) May 13, 2009

Filed under: Blues Radio — stevefranz @ 5:26 am

This week on “Blues Unlimited,” it’s more of our favorite post-war down home Rhythm Rockin’ Blues. Everyone from Junior Brooks to K.C Douglas and a little bit of everything else in between. Don’t miss it, only on www.kxci.org, this Wednesday morning, May 13, 2009, from 2-4am MST

 

Tribute to Joe Bihari’s Flair Records April 15, 2009

Filed under: Blues Radio — stevefranz @ 4:24 pm

Stay tuned for next week’s show– April 22, 2009. It will be a tribute to the Flair Record label, which was owned and operated by legendary record man Joe Bihari. That’s this Wednesday, 2-4am MST, on www.kxci.org

 

Blues Unlimited on the airwaves April 13, 2009

Filed under: Blues Radio — stevefranz @ 3:53 am

Well…. we’ve been on the air a few weeks now, and so far looks like it’s going pretty well, so thought we’d share the fact that my radio alter-ego, Sleepy Boy Hawkins, is hosting a radio show devoted to exploring every facet of the blues on Community Radio Station KXCI FM 91.3 from 2-4am MST, every Wednesday. What’s that you say? Not an insomniac who lives in Southern Arizona? No problem, just visit us on the web at www.kxci.org — there’ll, you also find our playlists from previous shows. Unfortunately, the webmaster at KXCI hasn’t caught up with the fact that Wednesday 2-4am slot now has another name and another DJ…. sigh…. well, that’s OK…. they just finished their successful Spring Pledge Drive too, so maybe they’ve got a few other things on their ‘to do’ list these days.

I was going to see about posting old show archives to this blog, but don’t think wordpress accepts audio files. And anyway, just found out the nifty software I purchased to record my show isn’t, uh, apparently so ‘user friendly’ as I thought (LOL). Well, as we work on getting all the glitches out of the system, stay tuned for our upcoming shows…. one will be a tribute to Joe Bihari’s Flair Records, and another will be on under-heralded West Coast Blues Guitarists. Previous shows have focused on Bobby’s Robinson’s labels (Fire, Fury, Enjoy, etc), Unreleased-on-Sun (great blues recordings that Sam Phillips never released as singles), Detroit Down Home Post War Blues, The Roots of Rock in 1940s Blues, Bentonia, Mississippi Blues and a look at the post-war R&B and Blues scene in Shreveport, Louisiana.

We’ve been having an utter blast doing the show so far, and hopefully the good folks at KXCI will see to it to find us a permanent slot in the schedule (as this is just, for the time being, a ‘test drive’).

And, in case your wondering, yes, the name of the show pays homage to the world’s first English-language publication devoted solely to covering all aspects of the Blues. Founded in the spring of 1963 by British Blues fanatics Simon Napier and Mike Leadbitter, Blues Unlimited was at the epicenter of the Blues Revival of the 1960s, and enjoyed a print run of almost 25 years. In the process, it became a cornerstone of Blues literature and research, as their pages were filled with many one-of-a-kind items, articles, rare interviews, and on-the-spot concert reports– not to mention a killer photographic archive– and on one particularly memorable occasion, Arthur ‘Big Boy’ Crudup’s recipe for home-made sour mash whiskey (Uh, kids, don’t try that at home, OK?). Champions of the famous as well as not-so-famous, the ‘knowns’ as well as the ‘unknowns’, one was just as likely to read about Dr. Isaiah Ross, Calvin Frazier, or Baby Boy Warren in the pages of BU as you were Sonny Boy Williamson, Muddy Waters or T-Bone Walker. Napier and Leadbitter were not only possessed of a natural curiosity and impeccable taste, but they also each had an immense knowledge that meshed quite well together (Simon tended to cover pre-war Blues, Mike, the post-war stuff, although a notable exception was that Simon was apparently a huge fan of Elmore James– as was Mike, of course; quite often, the task of reviewing Elmore’s latest LP would fall on Simon’s shoulders…. something I tend to think he rather relished doing).

Sadly, Mike and Simon both passed on long before their time was due. And while it’s true that they left behind some mighty big shoes to fill, Blues Unlimited on the airwaves hopes to pay tribute to two pioneering spirits of Blues literature by capturing just a fraction of the passion and enthusiasm that filled each and every page of BU. If we can manage to do that, then hopefully we’ll have a pretty good little radio show on our hands, and perhaps our listeners will agree with us as well.

Oh yeah, and there’s more great blues on KXCI too…. Marty Kool does a fantastic retrospective called the ‘Blues Review’ which airs every Saturday evening from 5-9pm MST, which he’s been doing for almost 25 years. Keep up the good work Marty!